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Noncoding somatic and inherited single-nucleotide variants converge to promote ESR1 expression in breast cancer

Authors :
Rossanna C. Pezo
Trevor J. Pugh
Mark Dowar
David W. Cescon
Ken Kron
Jennifer Silvester
Tak W. Mak
Mathieu Lupien
Benjamin Haibe-Kains
Aislinn E. Treloar
S. Y. Cindy Yang
Philippe L. Bedard
Richard C Sallari
Parisa Mazrooei
Kinjal Desai
Kelsie L. Thu
Xue Wu
Nicholas A Sinnott-Armstrong
Swneke D. Bailey
Source :
Nature genetics
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2016.

Abstract

Sustained expression of the estrogen receptor-α (ESR1) drives two-thirds of breast cancer and defines the ESR1-positive subtype. ESR1 engages enhancers upon estrogen stimulation to establish an oncogenic expression program. Somatic copy number alterations involving the ESR1 gene occur in approximately 1% of ESR1-positive breast cancers, suggesting that other mechanisms underlie the persistent expression of ESR1. We report significant enrichment of somatic mutations within the set of regulatory elements (SRE) regulating ESR1 in 7% of ESR1-positive breast cancers. These mutations regulate ESR1 expression by modulating transcription factor binding to the DNA. The SRE includes a recurrently mutated enhancer whose activity is also affected by rs9383590, a functional inherited single-nucleotide variant (SNV) that accounts for several breast cancer risk-associated loci. Our work highlights the importance of considering the combinatorial activity of regulatory elements as a single unit to delineate the impact of noncoding genetic alterations on single genes in cancer.

Details

ISSN :
15461718 and 10614036
Volume :
48
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ddfd15af10ec905311dbe14152c627af
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/ng.3650